A guy said that the questions on June tests are much more difficult because the testmakers assume that students won't be studying for Uni courses, and therefore will be studying more for the LSAT than they would be in October or December, when apparently the tests have much easier questions.

I was pretty amazed at how so many LSAT takers couldn't even bother to find and follow the most basic rules like not signing their admissions ticket before entering the room and making sure their photo is glued/taped onto their ticket.

It kinda made me angry right before the test knowing how many of these people didn't belong in law school and would, if they somehow made it in, come out of it with some massive debt that they would never fully repay and become a burden on the economy. And for what? Because they watched a little too much tv and thought law school would turn them into a james bond type lawyer?

I had a girl ahead of me in line at check in at UCLA say "I originally thought there were two Logical Reasoning sections, but then I realized one is always experimental...that means it doesn't count." I had to convince three people in line who got very concerned that she was wrong.

She also said she knew "plenty of lawyers who make lots of money who told (her) the LSAT doesn't matter because you don't have to go to an ABA school to work in California." She said she currently attended UCLA for undergrad.

I had a girl ahead of me in line at check in at UCLA say "I originally thought there were two Logical Reasoning sections, but then I realized one is always experimental...that means it doesn't count." I had to convince three people in line who got very concerned that she was wrong.

She also said she knew "plenty of lawyers who make lots of money who told (her) the LSAT doesn't matter because you don't have to go to an ABA school to work in California." She said she currently attended UCLA for undergrad.

I had a girl ahead of me in line at check in at UCLA say "I originally thought there were two Logical Reasoning sections, but then I realized one is always experimental...that means it doesn't count." I had to convince three people in line who got very concerned that she was wrong.

She also said she knew "plenty of lawyers who make lots of money who told (her) the LSAT doesn't matter because you don't have to go to an ABA school to work in California." She said she currently attended UCLA for undergrad.

why'd you correct her?

Didn't correct her, just the panicked people in line behind me. I thought I was a slacker only doing 15 PTs. Most of the people in line had only seen Oct 2007 because it was free.

ETA- My proctor also held at least 5 cell phones of people who "forgot". One even asked if he could use it at break.

Last edited by Actingmeg1 on Sun Oct 06, 2013 7:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.